| TWO weeks ago, Lea Garcia
called our office to inquire about L-1 Intracompany transfers. Her
sister, Sandra, is working with a US corporation in Singapore and
was recently offered a job in Buena Park. An Operations Manager
with American Express, Sandra is eligible to transfer to the US
under the L-1 Intracompany Transfer program of the United States
Citizenship and Immigration Services (UCSIS).
Certain managers, executives, or employees with specialized knowledge
who have been working for a business entity (corporation, partnership
or sole proprietor) may be transferred to a qualifying US corporation
in L-1 status in order to continue their employment with the same
employer in the United States. The definition of a manager includes
an employee who manages an essential function of the business within
a qualifying organization.
Specialized knowledge employees must have special knowledge of
the organization’s product, service, research, equipment,
management, or other interests, and its application in international
markets, or an advanced knowledge or expertise in the organization’s
processes and procedures.
To qualify for L-1, the following conditions must be met:
• The United States corporation is the same firm, corporation,
or other legal entity, or parent, branch, affiliate or subsidiary
thereof, for whom the beneficiary has been employed abroad;
• The employee to be transferred is a manager, executive,
or foreign national having specialized knowledge of the foreign
employer, and is to continue to be employed in the United States
as a managerial or in an executive position or a position requiring
specialized knowledge;
• The employee has been employed by the foreign corporation
for one continuous year within the three previous years prior to
being transferred to the United States;
• A requisite employer-employee relationship exists, and
will continue to exist after the employee is transferred to the
United States;
• Both the foreign corporation and the United States corporation
will continue to do business during the period that the employee
is transferred to the United States; and
• The employee is not subject to the limitation on readmission
for former L and H aliens, or the two-year foreign residence requirement
for former exchange visitors, or is not otherwise inadmissible to
the United States.
The L-1 petition is filed with the USCIS’ regional service
center having jurisdiction over the place of intended employment.
The petitioning company must be doing business in the United States
and at least one other country for the duration of the intracompany
transferee’s stay in the United States.
Both the US and the foreign company must be active. Except for
a company that is opening a new office in the United States, the
initial petition may be granted for a three-year period and renewed
in two-year increments up to the maximum permitted stay. Classifying
the employee in the right category is very important, particularly
if the company might sponsor the employee for permanent residence.
The intracompany transferee petition always should be structured
to allow the easiest transition to permanent resident status. A
transferee’s spouse or unmarried children under 21 years old
may be granted L-2 visas. An L-2 visa holder is not permitted to
work in the United States, but may attend school. The L non-immigrant
visa is a very useful resource for multinational and international
companies needing to bring foreign employees to the United States.
As such, it is advisable to obtain the assistance of a legal firm
like ours, the Law Offices of James G. Beirne (Asian American Legal
Center). Our office will help US companies successfully document
the alien’s qualifications and work experience, the relationship
between the foreign and US company, the nature of the work to be
performed, and other related issues.
For more information, call the Law Offices of James G. Beirne (Asian
American Legal Center) (818) 552-4500 or (562) 865-4480. First consultation
is free. We will help you analyze your situation and advise you
about the best course to take.
|